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- HF APRS BOAT AND RV TRACKING NET
-
- HF FREQS: MFJ/KAMS AEA'S Mode NORMAL USAGE
- 10.151 10.1515 LSB Mostly East Coast so far (Calif late eves)
- 7.085 7.0855 LSB Mostly West Coast
- 14.0963 14.0958 USB Proposed new APRS DX freq
-
- The 7 MHz frequency has a lot of QRM, but is good for shorter range APRS
- mobile during the day. Both the 10 and 14 MHz frequencies were very carefully
- chosen to minimize interference to all present users of the band and to
- provide some measure of QRM reduction to ourselves. Please note the SIDEBANDS
- used. These are important and here's why:
-
- By using 10.151 Lower Sideband, the packet signal RF energy is 1.7 Khz
- lower and is inside the band edge by 700 Hz. The sideband energy is down by
- 40 dB which meets the FCC requirements for band edge operation. I use the LSB
- convention in specifying the freq to be compatible with other packet channels
- on the band. Of course, you can operate on 10.147.6 USB which is exactly the
- same frequency, but you will have just as hard a time trying to explain to the
- Guys on 10.147 that you are NOT interfering with them!. ALSO PLEASE NOTE that
- these freqs assume an audio modulation center frequency of 1700 Hz. The AEA-
- PK232 uses tones centered at 2210 Hz and some others may use tones centered at
- 2125 Hz. Radios connected to a PK-232 need to be tuned 510 Hz higher using LSB
- and 510 Hz lower on USB. The other TNC's which use 2125 need an offset of 425
- Hz.
-
- On 20 meters, by selecting the frequency of 14.0963 UPPER SIDEBAND we
- are in effect radiating on 14.098 MHz. This frequency is a full 2 KHz away
- from the international CW Beacon frequency of 14.100 which SHOULD NOT BE USED
- FOR PACKET. The advantage of this 14.098 frequency is that it can also be
- described as 14.0997 LSB for 1700 HZ packet or 14.1002 for LSB with 2200 HZ
- tones. These are exactly the frequencies that all other packet stations might
- be trying to avoid if they do not understand the LSB offset! In effect, we
- are taking advantage of their missunderstanding. To further clarify this
- nuance, it is important to note that a packet station desiring to avoid the
- CW BEACON frequency of 14.100 should actually never operate within 500 Hz of
- 14.1017 LSB with 1700 HZ tones or 14.1022 LSB with 2210 Hz tones! Putting it
- a third way, we would be crucified if we announced that we are operating on
- 14.100 LSB by all those who do not understand LSB offsets. So we are just
- calling it 14.0963 USB to avoid the controversy. In any case, we are 2 KHz
- away from the TRUE CW BEACON FREQ!
-
- If we use this 20 meter freq for casual APRS DXing and new user familiar-
- ization, then we will remove some of the QRM from the 10.151 LSB national
- APRS tracking frequency. I expect this summer, 1994, to see a big increase
- in the number of boats and RV's tracked. In the future, we should also find
- a single APRS frequency on 18 and maybe 24 MHz. Any pioneers?
-
-
- HF OPERATIONS: So far, the HF/VHF modes in APRS do NOT re-configure your TNC.
- You must do this manually using the OPS-COMM dumb terminal mode to set change
- bands according to your TNC instructions. When you configure APRS for HF
- instead of VHF, it simply multiplies all timing routines by 2 to make up in
- the difference between 1200 and 300 baud (and the factor of two improvement
- when not using a digipeater on HF). So the net cycle time on HF is twice as
- long as on VHF. One other thing it does is to change your default ALIAS from
- the generic callsign of RELAY to the generic callsign of ECHO. Read the info
- on the UNPROTO command and in the README.RPT file to fully understand the
- implications of the generic ALIAS of RELAY used by all VHF APRS stations.
- Obviously, for a nationwide HF net, we do NOT want everyone digipeating
- everyone else's packets! So the change to the alias of ECHO is only important
- in that it REMOVES the generic ALIAS of RELAY! Of coure you can still digipeat
- your HF packets off of another station under critical or emergency situations,
- but now you should specify exactly who, by callsign, NOT by the generic call of
- ECHO. (In real emergencies where you want to maximize the chance of your signal
- being heard at the expense of nationwide collisions, then digi via ECHO)
-
- GATEWAYS: APRS has great applications through HF/VHF gateways. By assigning
- the generic APRS alias of GATE to the gateway function in any of the dual port
- Kantronics or AEA TNC's, then any HF station can gateway into your local net.
- HF stations can probably use the VIA path of GATE most of the time, because the
- slow HF operation could hardly clutter up any local VHF APRS networks. But
- users on VHF APRS networks should NEVER use GATE on the VHF side of their
- gateways except under extreme caution. This is of course because there will
- probably be more VHF users in a single VHF net than there will be HF users
- across the whole country. So the HF net would be totally clogged. I am
- concerned about over-using the VHF side of the gateway, and have included a
- mechanism to discourage the use of the GATE via path on VHF. That way a user
- will have to intentionally specify the GATE function each time he wants to
- use it and there will be no way for him to forget about it and accidently
- contribute to un-necessary QRM!
-
- To repeat: The purpose of HF/VHF gateways is to permit VHF local area
- APRS nets to see the movements of nationwide RV and BOATER mobiles. For
- example, when I go GPS mobile, I do not want to, and cannot leagally leave my
- HF station running at home so my wife can follow my status. But If I send my
- HF mobile APRS reports via the local HF GATEway, then my wife can see me on
- our computer which only needs to have a VHF TNC. Please DO NOT GATEWAY from
- VHF through a gateway ONTO HF! (Unless you have good reason.)
-
-
- TYPICAL DUAL PORT GATEWAY SET UP: So here in Annapolis, I have the two KAMS
- each with an HF radio on the two HF frequencies. The audio of their VHF
- sides are tied together into a 1 watt radio on 145.79. Both KAMS run with
- the GATEWAY callsign of GATE so that any HF APRS packets using the VIA path
- of GATE will be seen on our local 145.79 APRS net. The purpose of this gateway
- is to support the big picture APRS objective of allowing any mobile station
- anywhere in the country to report his position back to his home QTH. If I am
- driving through ANY area in the country that is using 145.79 for APRS and that
- has a GATEway station on either of the two APRS HF frequencies, my 2 meter APRS
- position report has a good chance of making it all the way back to my PC
- display. All I have to do is to set my mobile TNC outgoing path to WIDE,GATE,
- GATE,W3XYZ. This way the closest generic APRS WIDE digipeater will digipeat
- my report to the nearest GATEway. It will in turn digipeat the report out onto
- the HF APRS net. My Annapolis HF GATEway will then see the second GATE and
- repeat the packet onto the local VHF net through the local W3XYZ digipeater,
- which will then reach my home. Notice that all of the other gateways will also
- transmit the packet, but only the Annapolis packet will get digipeated via the
- W3XYZ digipeater. For this reason, an APRS gateway should have a low power VHF
- radio only capable of hitting the nearest VHF APRS digi so that it does not QRM
- a large area. Neat huh!
-
- SETTING THE UNPROTO PATH WITH THE DUAL PORT KAM: The HF and VHF
- parameters for the KAM Unproto command are separated by a slash character as
- follows: UNPROTO APRS VIA HFDIGI1,HFDIGI2/APRS VIA VHFDIGI1,VHFDIGI2 etc
- To set up your KAM using the APRS UNPROTO-VIA command, you need to remember to
- include the second half of the command as noted above. If you omit the second
- half of the command, then the KAM applies the Unproto command identically to
- both ports. Since I want my KAM to go out on VHF via the local WIDE area
- digipeaters (WIDE,WIDE) but I want the HF packets to go via any HF GATEway
- node (GATE), I can do that via the APRS UNPROTO command with the following:
- ... Enter new VIA path: GATE/APRS VIA WIDE,WIDE
- Notice that APRS automatically inserts the UNPROTO APRS VIA ... for the first
- part of the UNPROTO command and all I have to do is type the DIGI address
- (GATE here), but for the dual port KAM, that I must type "APRS VIA" again
- myself after the slash for the second half of the command (for the VHF port).
-
-
- CAUTIONS: Obviously the shared HF APRS net cannot handle a lot of such cross
- band position reporting, but if you are far enough away to have to use an
- HF link to report your position, then nobody really cares exactly where you
- are minute by minute, simply which town you are in is fine. So mobile stations
- using this gateway function should probably not beacon any more often than
- once every half hour. Similarly, HF stations such as boats and RV's I would
- not expect to routinely report any more often than that either. We will just
- have to see how APRS grows.
-
- OTHER BANDS: I only have two HF radios, which is why I have not looked for
- other APRS packet frequencies on the other bands. I would avoid the QRM on 20
- meters and would look next on the 18 MHz band for a good permanent APRS report-
- ing frequency for the long haul round-the-world boaters. Of course, an APRS
- frequency on the 20 meter band would be fun for just working APRS HF DX and
- seeing where those foreign stations are! In fact, after seeing the growth of
- APRS over the 93 Xmas holidays, I think it is time to start populating the
- 20m APRS freq. That would be a good place to play, and leave 10151 clear for
- real GPS mobiles. As of version 2.05, APRS can also plot stations using only
- grid squares. Any BEACON packet with the grid sq enclosed in brackets at the
- beginning of the BText will be plotted.
-
- HF TRACKING DEMONSTRATIONS: To see the results of some actual APRS HF
- tracking events, use Alt-R to REPLAY the 1st month of Naval Academy cruises
- in the 93BLOCK1.HST file. Those stations were transmitting once every 10
- minutes or so. My first HF mobile excursion was over Xmas holidays. When
- I returned 2 weeks later the file XMAS93.hst showed me all that was received
- in Annapolis of my journey (before the computer crashed). It shows good
- tracking from Knoxville TN to Florence Alabama. In fact, N2CZF (then in NJ)
- was able to track me all day, just about everyday, for the two week period,
- during daylight hours!
-
-